The most current wage data for the balance of the state and includes the boroughs of Aleutians East, Bristol Bay, Denali, Kenai Peninsula, Kodiak Island,
Lake and Peninsula, North Slope, and Northwest Arctic; and the census areas of Aleutians West, Bethel, Dillingham, Nome,
Southeast Fairbanks, Valdez-Cordova, Wade Hampton, and Yukon-Koyukuk.

The most current wage data for the Southeast Region and includes the boroughts of Haines, Juneau, Ketchikan, Yakutat, Sitka, and Skagway; and
the census areas of Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan, Hoonah-Angoon, and Wrangell-Petersburg.

Includes a searchable list of more than 2,500 occupational titles and all their published wage data for Alaska and the U.S.
Each occupation may also include a link to its career ladder/lattice and information on employment, supply and demand, worker characteristics,
licensing requirements, typical education and on-the-job training, and training available in Alaska.

The minimum wage for Alaska is $7.75 per hour, effective 1/10/10. This link provides more information
about the minimum wage at the Wage and Hour Section of the Department of Labor and Workforce Development.

Analysis of job creation (new positions added by employers) or turnover replacement
(the filling of vacated positions) based on employees that did not work for the reported employer during the previous four quarters.

Green jobs in Alaska by industry and occupation. Includes a link to the occupational information for the core green jobs in Alaska.
The occupational information includes data such as worker characteristics, licensing requirements, supply and demand, employment, wages,
and training resources and requirements.

Analysis of job creation (new positions added by employers) or turnover replacement (the filling of vacated positions) based on
employees that did not work for the reported employer during the previous four quarters.

Includes a searchable list of more than 2,500 occupational titles. Each occupation may include a link to its career ladder/lattice and
information on employment, wages, supply and demand, worker characteristics, licensing requirements, typical education and on-the-job training,
and training available in Alaska.

Green jobs in Alaska by industry and occupation. Includes a link to the occupational information for the core green jobs in Alaska. The occupational
information includes data such as worker characteristics, licensing requirements, supply and demand, employment, wages, and training resources and
requirements.

Analysis of job creation (new positions added by employers) or turnover replacement (the filling of vacated positions) based on
employees that did not work for the reported employer during the previous four quarters.

This occupational information subset identifies common occupations in the oil and gas industry.
It includes worker characteristics, licensing requirements, supply and demand, employment, wages, and training resources and requirements.

ALARI gathers various data such as population, employment, taxes, and census into one easily viewed Web page.
These data are available for Alaska, economic regions, boroughs/census areas, and communities.

- The percentage of nonresident workers in Alaska increased by two-tenths of a percentage point in 2013. The percentage in 2013 was 20.6, up from 20.4 percent in 2012. The total number of nonresident workers in 2013 was 86,291.

- The percentage of wages earned by nonresidents increased by four-tenths of a percentage point in 2013. Private-sector and state and local government wages totaled $15.8 billion in 2013. Nonresidents earned 15.2 percent of total wages, up from 14.8 percent in 2012.

- Alaska’s workforce increased by 0.2 percent to 419,465. The number of resident workers fell by 109, or 0.03 percent, to 333,174. Nonresident workers increased by 795, or 0.9 percent, to 86,291.

- Residents’ annual wages were higher on average than nonresidents’ wages. Total resident workers in Alaska typically earn more each year on average than nonresidents, and 2013 was no exception. Average resident wages grew 2.4 percent to $40,105, while average nonresident wages increased 4.7 percent to $27,760.

- Growth in total nonresident wages outpaced that of residents. Resident wages increased 2.3 percent to $13.4 billion in 2013, while nonresident wages increased 5.7 percent to $2.4 billion. For context, total wages paid to all oil and gas workers in 2013 equaled $1.8 billion and total construction wages equaled $1.2 billion.

- The seafood processing industry still employs the most nonresidents. Seafood processing had 17,631 nonresidents and 6,146 residents. Among all nonresident workers in 2013, 20.4 percent worked in the seafood processing industry, up from 19.7 in 2012. Nonresident seafood processors earned 10.7 percent of all nonresident wages.

- The oil industry lost resident workers and added nonresidents. The oil industry added 441 workers in 2013, growing by 2.5 percent. The number of residents in the oil industry fell by 60, or half a percent, and the number of nonresident workers increased by 501, or 9.1 percent. Wages for resident and nonresident workers in the oil industry increased by 2.3 and 8.0 percent, respectively.

- The percentage of nonresidents in the oil and gas industry increased in 2013. The oil industry had 6,029 nonresident and 11,913 resident workers. Nonresidents accounted for 33.6 percent of oil industry workers, up from 31.6 percent in 2012. The oil industry employed 7.0 percent of all nonresident workers but paid 24.3 percent of total nonresident wages.